The West’s pullout enabled the Taliban’s seizure of an Afghan city
The militant group’s siege of a northern Afghan city poses a major setback for the country’s National Unity Government, the National Post’s Brian Hutchinson writes.
The West left Afghanistan. The Taliban reloaded. The fall of Kunduz was the result.
After months of fighting Afghan National Security Forces (ANSF) in the northern province of Kunduz, Taliban insurgents overran its capital last week, a city of 300,000 and the fifth largest in the country. One of Afghanistan’s most prosperous, once.
The fighting continues; the situation in Kunduz is fluid, its outcome unclear. But the Taliban siege represents a major setback for Afghanistan’s new National Unity Government, symbolically and in practical terms. Kunduz, and Kandahar in the south, were the last urban centres held by Taliban fighters after western troops arrived in Afghanistan following the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks in the United States.
Among those troops were thousands of Canadian soldiers, 158 of whom didn’t come home alive.
Kunduz province is an important agricultural centre, as well as a trade and transportation hub that connects the rest of Afghanistan to neighbouring countries to the north. Kabul is 150 kilometres south of the provincial capital.
On paper, the Taliban should not have stood a chance; their fighters were vastly outnumbered in and around Kunduz by ANSF members, including regular Afghan Armed Forces troops and Afghan National Police, by a four-to-one ratio, according to some accounts. Nevertheless, a three-pronged insurgent assault on the ancient city caught government forces off guard.
Dozens of ANSF members have been killed and captured, while hundreds more have reportedly abandoned their positions and fled. Mohammad Omar Safi, appointed Kunduz provincial governor in December by Afghan president Ashraf Ghani, was outside the country when the insurgents’ attack began, raising eyebrows and suggestions of a conspiracy. Safi’s whereabouts remain a mystery; his former deputy is now ostensibly in charge.
American special forces, still in the area after the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) mission wound down last year, managed to penetrate Kunduz city from its outlying airport, and have helped the ANSF beat back insurgents.
The implications of the Taliban resurgence are sobering, as it shows the ANSF again is incapable of defending and securing the country without international help.
The United States has reduced its troop count, from about 100,000 soldiers in 2010 to 9,800. Canadian and other foreign troops wound up their military operations last year, after spending one trillion dollars battling the insurgency and assisting with civilian-led reconstruction efforts. Canada spent at least $12 billion in Afghanistan from 2001 to 2014, most of that on a frustrating combat assignment in Kandahar, from 2006 to 2011.
Canada now has “a limited number” of personnel in Afghanistan, men and women “serving in support functions at the Canadian Embassy in Kabul,” according to a military spokesman this week. “They also serve in a variety of individual exchange positions with allied forces. MADRID U.S. Defence Secretary Ash Carter promised a full and transparent investigation into whether a U.S. aircraft providing support for American and Afghan commandos was responsible for the explosions that destroyed a hospital in northern Afghanistan, killing 22 people.
Speaking to reporters travelling with him to Spain, Carter said, “the situation there is confused and complicated, so it may take some time to get the facts, but we will get the facts.”
He said he spoke to Gen. John Campbell, the top U.S. commander in Afghanistan, and to Marine Gen. Joseph Dunford, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, during his flight to Madrid, adding that “there will be accountability as always in these incidents, if that is required.”
The international medical charity Doctors Without Borders responded angrily Sunday to suggestions the hospital was a Taliban base.
The organization “is disgusted by the recent statements coming from some Afghanistan government authorities justifying the attack on its hospital in Kunduz,” Christopher Stokes, the general director of Doctors Without Borders, said in a statement.
“These statements imply that Afghan and U.S. forces working together decided to raze to the ground a fully functioning hospital with more than 180 staff and patients inside because they claim that members of the Taliban were present. This amounts to an admission of a war crime.”
U.S. officials said American special operations forces advising Afghan commandos in the vicinity of the hospital requested the air support when they came under fire in Kunduz. The officials said the AC-130 gunship responded and fired on the area, but Carter said it’s not certain whether that was what destroyed the hospital.
Doctors Without Borders said Sunday it had withdrawn from Kunduz in the wake of the deadly airstrike.
In order to maintain operational security and ensure the safety of Canadian Armed Forces personnel, no further information is available at this time,” he added.
The Taliban, of course, never left. They maintain strongholds in southern provinces such as Kandahar, and have continued their attacks across the country this year, including a string of suicide strikes in and around Kabul International Airport two months ago, which killed 55 people and injured hundreds more.
Kunduz represents the biggest Taliban victory — militarily, politically, as a propaganda piece — in a decade. But it likely won’t be their last.
The latest situation report from the United Nations Security Council, released in September, describes a “sustained conflict, which grew in both intensity and geographic scope (in the three previous months and) continued to result in significant casualties and displacement among Afghan civilians, as the ANSF sought to counter the efforts of insurgent groups to undermine the government.”
The ANSF is overwhelmed, the UN report makes clear. Since June this year, “the concerted effort by anti-government elements to capture and hold district centres in a number of provinces ... resulted in the capture of seven district centres, a significantly larger number than in previous years.”
Perhaps most tellingly, 103,000 Afghans were displaced from their homes in the first half of 2015, a 77 per cent increase compared with the same period last year. The largest number of displaced persons — by far — was recorded in Kunduz province, the UN reported.